Abstract

High-intensity physical exercise causes physical stress that will suppress immune system in athlete’s body. Decreased immune system function can cause physiological and pathological changes such as fatigue, reduce athlete performance, and increase risk of infection. Regulation diets of glycemic index (GI) and glycemic load (GL) are known to help control blood glucose during exercise so the immune system can be maintained.The purpose of this study was to determine differences effects of low and high glycemic load diets on immune responses in adolescent football athletes. This study was a quasi experimental with multiple time series design, conducted on 22 adolescent football athletes aged 15-17 years old. The subjects were divided into two groups, low GL diet group was given carbohydrate-source foods with GL 9.15, high GL diet group was given foods with GL 27.29. Diet was given once in the morning and 2 hours later subjects doing RAST (Running-based Anaerobic Sprint Test) to trigger physical stress. Immune response was measure using total leukocytes and leukocytes differential count. There were no significant differences in blood glucose levels, leukocyte counts, and leukocytes differential count between low GL and high GL groups (p0.05). Low GL diet causes an increase in blood glucose and total leukocytes smaller than high GL diet.Â

Highlights

  • Football is a high-intensity endurance sport that lasts for 90 minutes (Kirkendall, 2011)

  • Other studies conducted on soccer athletes report that salivary immunoglobulin A (s-IgA) concentrations are significantly lower after high intensity exercise rather than low intensity exercise. s-IgA is a marker to predict the risk of infection in endurance athletes, decrease s-IgA concentration can increase the risk of infection in athletes (Owen et al, 2016)

  • Previous study have reported that leukocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, monocytes, basophils increased after high intensity exercise (75% Maximum heart rate) (Abdossaleh et al, 2014)

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Summary

Introduction

Football is a high-intensity endurance sport that lasts for 90 minutes (Kirkendall, 2011). High intensity exercise can cause physical stress and lead to immunodepression in athlete’s body (Gleeson, 2007; Gunzer, Konrad and Pail, 2012). Decreased immune function result in increase risk of infection in athletes so that it can interfere the recovery process and reduce performance during the competition or training (Gunzer, Konrad and Pail, 2012). Immune responses that occur due to physical exercise are increase of leukocytes, neutrophils, monocytes, lymphocytes and natural killer cells (Maughan and Gleeson, 2010). Previous study have reported that leukocytes, neutrophils, lymphocytes, eosinophils, monocytes, basophils increased after high intensity exercise (75% Maximum heart rate) (Abdossaleh et al, 2014). Impaired immune function because of pphysical exercise pISSN 1858-1196 eISSN 2355-3596

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